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A few months waxing chain
Hello all,
A couple of months have passed since I switched to wax for chain lubrication. I would estimate I rode about 3,000 kilometers with my chain (cleaning it and lubricating it four times, I think), a point at which I usually start measuring at least some elongation. In this case, I cannot measure any. 10 links span 254 mm ± .3 mm, so that is less than 1 ‰ of elongation. My chain is a good as new. As an additional bonus, my entire drivetrain has never been that clean! Unfortunately, when I switched to chain waxing, I also changed from Shimano chains to a KMC 9.73 one, so I cannot assert that waxing is good for chain wear, only that either it is, or KMC chains are very resistant, or both. Anyway, now I think I will soon be at the point where I will have to replace my cassette that is starting to be a bit worn, without changing the chain that is still as good as new! -- Tanguy |
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#2
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A few months waxing chain
On Friday, November 30, 2018 at 4:55:08 AM UTC-8, Tanguy Ortolo wrote:
Hello all, A couple of months have passed since I switched to wax for chain lubrication. I would estimate I rode about 3,000 kilometers with my chain (cleaning it and lubricating it four times, I think), a point at which I usually start measuring at least some elongation. In this case, I cannot measure any. 10 links span 254 mm ± .3 mm, so that is less than 1 ‰ of elongation. My chain is a good as new. As an additional bonus, my entire drivetrain has never been that clean! Unfortunately, when I switched to chain waxing, I also changed from Shimano chains to a KMC 9.73 one, so I cannot assert that waxing is good for chain wear, only that either it is, or KMC chains are very resistant, or both. Anyway, now I think I will soon be at the point where I will have to replace my cassette that is starting to be a bit worn, without changing the chain that is still as good as new! -- Tanguy My experience has been that chain waxes give you a far cleaner chain for a long time and the chain is usually quiet but the wear is fairly fast. And it leaves that impenetrable black muck on the cassette and chain rings which is very difficult to remove. Rock and Roll Gold appears to me to work the best as long as you follow the directions completely - including the leaving it dry overnight. KMC chains - the upper level ones like the Silver and Gold - wear very well but are significantly heavier. |
#3
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A few months waxing chain
On 11/30/2018 7:55 AM, Tanguy Ortolo wrote:
Hello all, A couple of months have passed since I switched to wax for chain lubrication. I would estimate I rode about 3,000 kilometers with my chain (cleaning it and lubricating it four times, I think), a point at which I usually start measuring at least some elongation. In this case, I cannot measure any. 10 links span 254 mm ± .3 mm, so that is less than 1 ‰ of elongation. My chain is a good as new. As an additional bonus, my entire drivetrain has never been that clean! Unfortunately, when I switched to chain waxing, I also changed from Shimano chains to a KMC 9.73 one, so I cannot assert that waxing is good for chain wear, only that either it is, or KMC chains are very resistant, or both. Anyway, now I think I will soon be at the point where I will have to replace my cassette that is starting to be a bit worn, without changing the chain that is still as good as new! Did you use pure paraffin wax, or did you add any oil to the melted wax? -- - Frank Krygowski |
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A few months waxing chain
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#6
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A few months waxing chain
On 1/12/18 12:28 pm, John B. slocomb wrote:
I've been using a mix of paraffin and a light grease containing Molybdenum disulfide. I added a bit of bee's wax thinking it might make the mixture a bit more pliable but I'm not sure that is necessary. As paraffin is soluble in benzene I suppose that one could brew up a liquid batch, with benzene, and squirt it on with an oil can but dunking the chain in an electrical pot full of paraffin seems so much easier :-) The other nice thing is that a pot full lasts for years. One doesn't have to worry about running short and much cheaper then the proprietary blends too :-) I'm beginning to think it is more constructive to point and laugh at people who spend a lot for a little bottle of mostly solvent and a fraction of lubricant. -- JS |
#7
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A few months waxing chain
On Sat, 1 Dec 2018 16:56:00 +1100, James
wrote: On 1/12/18 12:28 pm, John B. slocomb wrote: I've been using a mix of paraffin and a light grease containing Molybdenum disulfide. I added a bit of bee's wax thinking it might make the mixture a bit more pliable but I'm not sure that is necessary. As paraffin is soluble in benzene I suppose that one could brew up a liquid batch, with benzene, and squirt it on with an oil can but dunking the chain in an electrical pot full of paraffin seems so much easier :-) The other nice thing is that a pot full lasts for years. One doesn't have to worry about running short and much cheaper then the proprietary blends too :-) I'm beginning to think it is more constructive to point and laugh at people who spend a lot for a little bottle of mostly solvent and a fraction of lubricant. Ah but... they are using the absolute best chain lube available... just ask them :-) cheers, John B. |
#8
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A few months waxing chain
John B. slocomb wrote:
On Sat, 1 Dec 2018 16:56:00 +1100, James wrote: On 1/12/18 12:28 pm, John B. slocomb wrote: I've been using a mix of paraffin and a light grease containing Molybdenum disulfide. I added a bit of bee's wax thinking it might make the mixture a bit more pliable but I'm not sure that is necessary. As paraffin is soluble in benzene I suppose that one could brew up a liquid batch, with benzene, and squirt it on with an oil can but dunking the chain in an electrical pot full of paraffin seems so much easier :-) The other nice thing is that a pot full lasts for years. One doesn't have to worry about running short and much cheaper then the proprietary blends too :-) I'm beginning to think it is more constructive to point and laugh at people who spend a lot for a little bottle of mostly solvent and a fraction of lubricant. Ah but... they are using the absolute best chain lube available... just ask them :-) cheers, John B. Ask anyone and they'll tell you they're using the absolute best chain lube available. :-) |
#9
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A few months waxing chain
On Sat, 1 Dec 2018 07:02:38 +0000 (UTC), Ralph Barone
wrote: John B. slocomb wrote: On Sat, 1 Dec 2018 16:56:00 +1100, James wrote: On 1/12/18 12:28 pm, John B. slocomb wrote: I've been using a mix of paraffin and a light grease containing Molybdenum disulfide. I added a bit of bee's wax thinking it might make the mixture a bit more pliable but I'm not sure that is necessary. As paraffin is soluble in benzene I suppose that one could brew up a liquid batch, with benzene, and squirt it on with an oil can but dunking the chain in an electrical pot full of paraffin seems so much easier :-) The other nice thing is that a pot full lasts for years. One doesn't have to worry about running short and much cheaper then the proprietary blends too :-) I'm beginning to think it is more constructive to point and laugh at people who spend a lot for a little bottle of mostly solvent and a fraction of lubricant. Ah but... they are using the absolute best chain lube available... just ask them :-) cheers, John B. Ask anyone and they'll tell you they're using the absolute best chain lube available. :-) And the best bicycle and the best chain and the best lights and, and, and :-) cheers, John B. |
#10
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A few months waxing chain
Frank Krygowski, 2018-11-30 18:11+0100:
Did you use pure paraffin wax, or did you add any oil to the melted wax? About 2/3 paraffin wax and 1/3 paraffin oil. -- Tanguy |
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